Quantum Physics
Is there any online source with I can get to satisfy this need? Something like the idiot's guide to QP, or QP commentaries for dummies, etc?
I guess it depends on how much of an idiot/dummy you think you are
It's funny that you started this thread here rather in the science sub-forum ... I guess you're like me interested in the interpretation
I don't think you can separate the interpretation from depth of knowledge. A person well versed in the physics & mathematics of quantum physics is bound to have a different interpretation from a person whose knowledge is limited to an heuristic or layman level. So it all goes back to my question, meant to be both humorous & serious. Do you know any math at all? High school algebra? College calculus? More or less? Have you ever seen a physics or science class at any level? Are you interested in reading about the science of quantum physics or the philosophy of quantum physics? I can perhaps help with the former, but not much with the latter.
I was a philosophy major before I became a physics major, in which field I eventually graduated (BS, 1978; MS, 1985) & worked (retired last november). I found philosophy as a field to be rather less interesting from the inside than it looked from the outside, and I ran screaming in terror from
philosophers. Thank heaven for physics.
As for online sources, these look decent to me.
Wikipedia -
Introduction to quantum mechanics
Wikipedia -
Quantum Mechanics
The introduction is less rigorous in content than the main article, which contains considerable mathematics. Both look correct to me, though as a general rule one must approach
Wikipedia with some caution (i.e., their
Scientific Method Page has been locked due to vandalism).
Usenet Physics FAQ
Scroll down to the "Quantum Physics" section. The few entries are all non-mathematical, so you should be able to read them with no math background at all. The host for the archive & author of some/much of the material is John Baez, a well known theoretical physicist.
Grains of Mystique: Quantum Physics for the Layman
Looks reasonable to me. The authors are both computer scientists and the material was vetted through the sci.physics.relativity newsgroup.
Quantum Physics
From the University of Winnipeg, Canada. Brief but hits the high points. You will need to be able to read algebraic equations.
History of Quantum Mechanics
A brief but accurate history of how quantum physics came to be, from the
MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive, School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of St. Andrew, Scotland.
Personal and Historical Perspectives of Hans Bethe
Hans Bethe (1906-2005) was one of the great names in physics for most of a century. This page links to 3 videos (in Quicktime format) of lectures Bethe gave, at the age of 93, at the Kendal Retirement Home in Ithaca, New York. "
Intended for an audience of Professor Bethe's neighbors at Kendal, the lectures hold appeal for experts and non-experts alike. The presentation makes use of limited mathematics while focusing on the personal and historical perspectives of one of the principal architects of quantum theory whose career in physics spans 75 years."
There are other reliable online sources, but they require increasing amounts of familiarity with prerequisites in physics & math and are mostly not for non science audiences. Knowing no more than I do about what you really want to accomplish and at what level, that's the best I can do for now.